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The End of the Legends
By Wolfgang Strauss

Alexander Solschenitsyn,
"200 Jahre zusammen." Die russisch-jüdische Geschichte 1795-1916 (200
Years Together. The Russian-Jewish History 1795-1916), Herbig, Munich 2002, 560
pp., €34.90; "Zweihundert Jahre zusammen," Die Juden in der Sowjetunion
(200 Years Together. The Jews in the Soviet Union), ibidem, 2003, 608
pp., €39.90.
It may be said without
hesitation that Alexander Solzhenitsyn’s 200 Years Together. The Jews
in the Soviet Union is one of the most important books on the Russian
Revolution and the early Bolshevik period ever to appear. After publication of
this work with its many revelations about the role of the Jews during the
Leninist period, the history of the Bolshevik October putsch will have to be
rewritten, if not completely, then with substantial additions.
The book title might
have been even more appropriately called "The End of the Legends." For example,
the legend that there ever existed an independent "Russian" Social Democracy
Party is questioned. Founded in Minsk in 1898, the Russian Social Democratic
Workers Party (RSDWP) derived, with respect to personnel and
organization, from the Allgemeine jüdische Arbeiterbund in Lithuania,
Poland, and Russia. It might be said that the Jewish Arbeiterbund midwife
service officiated at the birth of the Russian Social Democracy Party. Legends
without number are examined.
Solzhenitsyn emphasizes,
"Many more Jewish voices than Russian are heard in this book". Jewish voices,
not Russian, speak of Jewish dominance in the anti-monarchial movements in the
period before the war. In an article entitled "The Jewish Revolution" in
the 10 December 1919 issue of the Neue Jüdischen Monatsheften, published
in Berlin, was the sentence:
"Regardless of how
extremely the anti-Semites exaggerate it, and how so nervously the Jewish
bourgeoisie deny it, the large Jewish contingent in today’s revolutionary
movement stands fast."
The writer, whom the
publicist Sonia Margolina calls a "patriarch" in the tradition of Dostoyevsky,
the last Russian prophet, rejects decisively, almost passionately, all theses of
collective guilt. The chronicler of the Gulag holds that neither the Russians
nor the Jews can be held separately responsible for the emergence of the reign
of terror. He characterizes the relationship between Russian and Jews as a
"burning wedge." In his book he tries to see the wedge from both sides. In so
doing, the legends dissolve.
Perhaps the most
persistent legend, now dissolved, used to go like this: Long before the last
Tsar left the throne, the old Russian Empire was in decline, the revolution was
coming, the apocalypses of February and October 1917 could not have been
prevented. They were determined as if by a world court. Only a legend,
Solzhenitsyn says, and this chapter in his book, a noir-thriller,
illuminates 18 September 1911 – a day that heralded the approach of the Great
Terror in that it dimmed the last opportunity to prevent it.
They had tried to
assassinate Petr Stolypin eight times. Various terrorist groups had attempted to
murder Stolypin and his family, but they had never succeeded in killing the man
who had set governmental direction in the decade before the war nor in
tarnishing his reputation and charisma. The "Russian Bismarck," as he was
called, had, as an unassuming Christian and self-confident first servant of the
Russian Empire, led his country into the modern age by introducing agrarian
reforms and representative self-government that made individual enterprising
farmers out of the backward villagers. The eighth attempt, however, on 18
September 1911 in the Kiev Opera, succeeded in ending the life of the great
reformer who had served his country as minister president and minister of the
internal affairs. Ninety years later Solzhenitsyn was to write:
"The first Russian
premier minister, who had honorably set the task of establishing equal rights
for Jews and had even opposed the Tsar in attempting to realize it, was killed
at the hands of a Jew. Was it an irony of history?"
(p. 431)
The assassin was Mordko
Hershovich Bogrov, a university student, grandson of a liquor concessionaire and
son of a millionaire. When he fired his Browning at Stolypin, Bogrov was 23
years old. Those shots brought the process of Russian reformation, including
Stolypin’s measures to lift anti-Jewish restrictions, to a fateful end by their
own hands. Among the grave consequences of 18 September was a radical change in
world politics. Stolypin had opposed Russian foreign policy that had been
hostile to Germany and friendly with France and Britain. Solzhenitsyn asserts
that under Stolypin Russia would have never entered World War I. The ultimate
beneficial consequence for the Russian people would have been that they would
have been spared the February revolution, which was triggered by the defeats in
the First World War.
Whether Bogrov acted
alone or as a member of the Bolshevik, Menshevik, or anarchist underground
remains unknown. Solzhenitsyn provides no answer. But the Nobel Laureate does
not doubt that Mordo Hershevich was an agent of the Okhrana, a spy in the pay of
the Tsarist secret police. In August Nineteen-Fourteen, the first volume
of The Red Wheel cycle, 233 pages are given over to the ‘Jewish Question’
by a partially documentary and partially literary presentation of Stolypin’s
person and his reforms. There, too, is a characterization of the assassin and a
psychogram of Bogrov’s motive:
"Stolypin had done
nothing directly against the Jews, he had even made their lives easier in some
ways, but it did not come from the heart. To decide whether or not a man is an
enemy of the Jews, you must look beneath the surface. Stolypin boosted Russian
national interests too blatantly and too insistently, even provocatively about
Russian international interests.
[…] the Russianness of the Duma as a
representative body, the Russianness of the State. He was trying to build, not
a country in which all were free, but a nationalist monarchy. So that the
future of the Jews was not affected by his goodwill toward them. The
development of the country along Stolypin’s lines promised no golden age for
the Jews. Bogrov might or might not take part in revolutionary activity, might
associate with the Maximalists, Anarcho-Communists, or with no one, might
change his Party allegiance and change his character a hundred time over, but
one thing was beyond all doubt: his exceptionally talented people must gain
the fullest opportunity to develop unimpeded in Russia." (p. 592 in
August-Fourteen)
Because of this passage,
fifteen printed lines in all, Solzhenitsyn has been accused of anti-Semitism –
not by the Russians but in the American press. The unusually gifted people
referred to in the passage are the Jewish people.
After the deadly shots
of Kiev, the shots fired in Sarajevo three years later destroyed the peace of
Europe. Kiev and Sarajevo belong together as turning points in the history of
mankind. The depiction of Stolypin’s assassin belongs among the highpoints in
Solzhenitsyn’s career, who to this point had evoked no positive echo in the
(West) German media – which regrettably was to be expected. In any case, the
Frankfurt, Munich, Hamburg, and Berlin reviews have become like a hotbed of
hedonism that is the most inappropriate reception imaginable for ethical and
aesthetic ascetics like Solzhenitsyn.
Gerd Koenen of the
Welt newspaper (12 October 2002), who calls this great Russian a "moral
overlord," believes it would be "an unreasonable intellectual demand" to be
forced to read his work. Nonetheless, Koenen attributes a "patriarchal
sternness" to the Russian in a tone that is not accusatory or virulent, but
rather "deliberately conciliatory." That Sonia Margolina of all people, the
daughter of a Jewish Trotskyite, of whom she remains proud today, that of
all people, this nostalgic Red can accuse Solzhenitsyn’s enlightened spirit of
"always looking backwards" should be laughed at as a joke in a feuilleton world.
Every truth lives within a time nucleus. The truth about the October Revolution
in which the Bogrovs, Bronsteins, Mandelstams, Auerbachs, Rosenfelds,
Brilliants, and Apfelbaums played an essential role, is being vomited up ten
years after the end of the failed experiment of Communism.
The Dirty Revolution I
If it is true that it
was neither the planned economy nor the absence of democracy that landed
bolshevism in the dustbin of history, then the question of just when the
downfall set in and what caused it must be answered. Alexander Solzhenitsyn,
deemed the greatest conservative writer of our times by many, cites 1918 as the
date Red Terror was born.
A terrorist named
Apfelbaum proclaimed the mass death sentence:
"The bourgeoisie can
kill some individuals, but we can murder whole classes of people."
In that year the
non-communist intelligentsia saw Medusa’s head. Apfelbaum, who entered the
history books as Zinovev, wanted to send ten million Russians (ten out of each
one hundred) to the smoldering ovens of the class war. German historyian Prof.
Dr. Ernst Nolte states that this pronouncement of 17 September 1918 sounds
almost unbelievable in its monstrosity; Apfelbaum formulated this holocaust
sentence:
"From
the population of a hundred million in Soviet Russia, we must win over ninety
million to our side. We have nothing to say to the others. They have to be
exterminated."
In this, his latest
book, Solzhenitsyn writes of the "dushiteli Rossii" (stranglers of
Russia,) the "palachi grasnoy revolyutsii" (hangmen of the dirty
revolution.) Who does he mean exactly? On page 89 he writes, "Bol’sheviki
yevrey" the "Jew Bolsheviks." In another place he uses the term "Bol’shevististkiye
Juden" (Bolshevistic Jews). Superordinate to these is the key expression –
"Yevreyskiy vopros" (the Jewish Question). After 1918 the Communist
censors in no way forbade this expression, even with regard to Jew Bolsheviks
the Jewish question was not a taboo. On the contrary, the Jewish question became
the central theme of the Party ideology, which had become a secular religion.
Lenin himself set the example in 1924 with his famous instructive paper "On the
Jewish Question in Russia," published in the Moscow Proletariat Publishing House
(cited by Solzhenitsyn on page 79).
Given the factual
revelations in this book, the history of the 20th Century ought to be
revised, especially that of the Soviet Union with particular reference to the
collapse of the great ideological fronts in the pre-revisionist period. What is
new in this work is Solzhenitsyn’s graphic depiction of a phenomenon about which
the (West) German historians’ establishment has kept absolutely mute about,
namely, that the historically unprecedented cruelty exercised in the seizure of
power, the Russian Civil War, and wartime (WWII) had a clearly defined
ideological and anthropological source. As mentioned above, the codeword
Solzhenitsyn uses is "Jew Bolsheviks."
"Before the October
Revolution, Bolshevism was not the numerically strongest movement among the
Jews." (p. 73)
Solzhenitsyn recalls
that immediately before the Revolution, the Bolshevistic Jews Trotsky and
Kamenev concluded a military alliance with three Jewish social revolutionaries –
Natanson, Steinberg, and Kamkov. What Solzhenitsyn is saying is that Lenin’s
military putsch, from the purely military point of view, relied on a Jewish
network. The collaboration between Trotsky and his coreligionists in the Left
Social Revolutionary parties assured Lenin’s success in the Palace revolt of
October 1917. As crown witness, Solzhenitsyn cites the Israeli historian Aron
Abramovitch who in 1982 in Tel Aviv wrote:
"In October 1917 the
Jewish contingent of soldiers played a decisive role in the preparation and
execution of the armed Bolshevik uprising in Petrograd and other cities as
well as in the following battles in the course of suppressing rebellions
against the new Soviet power."
The famed Latvian Rifle
Regiment of the 12th Army, Lenin’s praetorian guard, had a Jewish
commissar, Nachimson, in charge.
There are crimes that
the descendents of the victims cannot bear. Those are crimes that break through
the last protective wall, crimes like the psychocide of a civilized people. Most
educated Russians sensed in October the emergence of a destructive reordering
principle. ‘October’ became synonymous with a deadly threat to their existence.
In 1924 the Jewish historian, Pasmanik, wrote:
"The emergence of
Bolshevism was the result of special aspects of Russian history. However,
Soviet Russia can thank the work of the Jewish commissars for the organization
of Bolshevism."
Solzhenitsyn cites this
key passage on page 80 in which the word "organization" is in quotes in the book
text.
The large number of
eyewitness reports from the early period of Soviet rule is astounding. In the
Council of People’s Commissars, the writer Nashivin simply notes: "Jews, Jews,
Jews." Nashivin avers that he was never an anti-Semite, but "the mass of Jews in
the Kremlin literally knocks your eyes out." In 1919 the famous writer Vladimir
Korolenko, who was close to the Social Democrats and who had protested against
the pogroms in Tsarist Russia, made the following entry in his diary:
"There are many Jews
and Jewesses among the Bolsheviks. Their main characteristics –
self-righteousness, aggressive tactlessness and presumptive arrogance – are
painfully evident. Bolshevism is found contemptible in the Ukraine. The
preponderance of Jewish physiognomies, especially in the Cheka, evokes an
extremely virulent hatred of Jews among the people."
Chapter 15 of
Solzhenitsyn’s book opens with the words:
"Jews among the
Bolsheviks is nothing new. Much has already been written about it."
This for Solzhenitsyn is
further support for his cardinal thesis, namely, that Bolshevik Jews were the
indispensable power brokers in the victory of Bolshevism, in the Russian Civil
War, and in the early Soviet Regime.
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Alexander Solzhenitzyn |
"Whoever holds the
opinion that the revolution was not a Russian, but an alien-led revolution
points to the Yiddish family names or pseudonyms to exonerate the Russian
people for the revolution. On the other hand, those who try to minimize the
over-proportional representation of Jews in the Bolshevik seizure of power may
sometimes claim that they were not religious Jews, but rather, apostates,
renegades, and atheists."
According to rabbinical
law, whoever was born of a Jewish mother is a Jew. Orthodox Judaism requires
more, i.e., recognition of the Hebraic Halacha scriptural laws and the
observance of the religious laws of the Mishna, which form the basis of the
Talmud. Solzhenitsyn then asks:
"How strong were the
influence, power, fascination, and adherence of secular Jews among the
religious Jews and how many atheists were active among the Bolsheviks? Can a
people really just renounce its renegades? Does such a renunciation make any
sense?"
Solzhenitsyns’s attempt
to answer these questions on the basis of historical facts concentrates on
several factors, namely, the behavior of Orthodox Jews after October, the
relative numbers of Bolshevik Jews before and after October, the ascendance of
Bolshevistic Jews in the cadres of the Red Army and the Cheka, Lenin’s Jewish
strategy, and finally, Lenin’s own heritage.
"The Bolsheviks
appealed to the Jews immediately after the seizure of power. And they came;
they came in masses. Some served in the executive branch, others in the
various governmental organs. They came primarily from among secular young Jews
who in no way could be classified as atheists or even as enemies of God. This
phenomenon bore a mass character."
(p. 79)
By the end of 1917 Lenin
had not yet left Smolny, when a Jewish Commissariat for Nationality Questions
was already at work in Petrograd. In March 1919 the VIII Party Congress of the
Communist Party (Bolsheviks) undertook to establish a "Jewish Soviet Russian
Communist Bund."
In this matter
Solzhenitsyn again relies on Jewish historians. Leonard Schapiro, living in
London in 1961, wrote:
"Thousands of Jews
streamed to the Bolsheviks whom they saw as the protectors of the
international revolution."
M. Chaifetz also
commented on the Jewish support of Bolshevism:
"For a Jew, who came
neither from among the aristocrats nor the clergy, Bolshevism represented a
successful and promising new prospect to belong to a new clan."
The Chaifetz article
appeared in 1980 in an Israeli journal for the Jewish intelligentsia arriving
from the USSR.
The influx of Jewish
youths into the Bolshevik Party at first was a consequence of the pogroms in the
territory held by the White Army in 1919, argues a certain Schub. Solzhenitsyn
rejects Schub’s argument as a myth:
"Schub’s argument is
not valid because the massive entry of Jews into the Soviet apparatus occurred
as early as 1917 and throughout all of 1918. Unquestionably, the Civil War
situation in 1919 did hasten the amalgamation of Jewish cadres with the
Bolsheviks." (p. 80)
Solzhenitsyn traces the
rise in Judeophobia, among other things, back to the brutal Bolshevistic
suppression of peasant and citizen uprisings, the slaughter of priests and
bishops, especially the village clergy, and finally, the extermination of the
nobility, culminating in the murder of the Tsar and his family.
During the decisive
years of the Civil War (1918-1920) the secret police (Cheka) was controlled by
Bolshevistic Jews. The commandants of the various prisons were usually from
Poland or Latvia.
Exclusively Jews
occupied the Party, Army, and Cheka command positions in Odessa. Jews
constituted the majority in the Presidium of the Petrograd City Soviet. Lazar
Kaganovich directed the Civil War terror in Nizhny Novgorod, while Rosalia
Salkind-Semlyachka commanded the mass executions by firing squads in the
Kremlin. In 1920 the farming areas of West Siberia were turned into a Vendée
when grain-commissar Indenbaum through his confiscation campaigns caused mass
starvation. During the winter in the steppes, rebellious farmers were forced to
dig their own graves. The Chekists doused the naked bodies with water; those
that tried to flee were machine-gunned. The peasant uprising in Tyumen entered
the history books as the "Iskhimski Rebellion".
By virtue of the sheer
numbers liquidated and the radicalism and motivation of the perpetrators, the
mass executions of Russian Orthodox priests assumed a genocidal character. The
intellectual elite of Eastern Christendom in Russia was literally slaughtered.
Lenin provided the impetus. On 27 July 1918, shortly after the murder of the
Tsar and his family, the Soviet government ordered the liquidation of all
pogromists; every priest was by law considered to be a pogromist. As Lunacharsky
recalls, Lenin composed the text of the law by his own hand, and Lenin ordered
that the clergy could be executed (vne zakona) outside the law and the
courts. That meant, Solzhenitsyn comments, they could simply be shot out of
hand.
It was Lenin, not
Stalin, who on 17 July 1918 let loose the demons (p. 15). It was the Party,
Army, and Cheka apparatus under Lenin’s command during the early Bolshevik
period that characterized the ideology of crimes against humanity. (Ernst Nolte
writes about ‘an ideological extermination postulate.’) "The key to the decision
was in Lenin’s hands," Solzhenitsyn asserts in his chapter on Bartholomew’s
Night in Yekaterinburg. Lenin exhibited neither doubt nor compromise in this
matter. "He had no reservations about exterminations." To destory and
exterminate was his intend.
For this destruction and
extermination, Sverdlov, Dzerzhinski, and Trotsky were his most powerful allies.
None of them was Russian. Lenin’s executioners in Yekaterinburg and the Ural
governments were not Russians. The bloody careers of Goloshekin and Beloborodov,
the Party terrorists and Ural mafia killers, are described on pp. 90-91. Yankel
Yurovsky, who boasted "it was my revolver that knocked off Nicholas on the
spot," certainly was not a Russian. In 1936 Stalin’s Chekists executed
Beloborodov in Lubyanka, whether as a Jew, a cosmopolitan, or as an enemy of
Stalin’s Russification policies. Goloshekin met death in the Fall of 1941 as
German tanks approached Moscow.
Is Russia a land of
criminal perpetrators? Solzhenitsyn denies it as strongly as he rejects the
concept of collective guilt in general, and the rejection pertains to both the
Large People (the Russians) as well as the Small People (the Jews). And who were
the victims? The overwhelming majority were Russians. Those shot in cellars,
those burnt to death in the cloisters, those drowned in river boats, those
hanged in the forest; officers, peasants, aristocrats, proletariats, the
anti-anti-Semitic bourgeois intellectuals – Russians mostly, but others as well.
The "hangmen of the Revolution," the crimes they try to justify with
internationalism, transformed their "dirty revolution" into what Solzhenitsyn
calls an "antislav" revolution. No, the Nobel Laureate Solzhenitsyn emphasizes,
the Cheka-Lubyanka-Gulag holocaustic perpetrators could not possibly be a Slavic
people (p. 93)
On page 233 of Nolte’s
Der Kausale Nexus is an early confirmation of Solzhenitsyn’s theses. The
German historian is convinced that the term "Jewish Bolshevism" is not simply an
invention made for crude political purposes, but that it is historically
well-founded and not to be expunged from history "regardless of how terrible the
National Socialist consequences were". Nolte draws a parallel to the other
contrary, ideological postulate:
"Only when it has not
been excluded and made a taboo beforehand can ‘Auschwitz’ escape the danger
that now threatens it, namely, that by being isolated from ‘Gulag’ and the
conflict between the two ideologically driven States (Germany and the Soviet
Union) it becomes not a lie, but a myth that contradicts history."
Is Solzhenitsyn the
first historian to examine the dark year of 1918 scientifically? About a decade
ago, the Russian Jewess Sonya Margolina, daughter of a Bolshevik of the
Lenin-Stalin era, wrote about the crimes committed by the Bolsheviks and the
part the Jews played in them. The horrors of the Revolution and the Civil War
are "closely bound to the image of the Jewish commissar," she writes in Das
Ende der Lügen (The End of the Lies), published in 1992 by Siedler
Publishers in Berlin. Her book bore the shocking subtitle The Russian Jews –
Perpetrators and Victims at the Same Time. Sentences appear in the chapter
"Jews and Soviet Power" whose validity Solzhenitsyn now confirms. "In the first
years after the revolution the Bolsheviks and the Jews at their side ruled
Russia with the cold sweat of fear on their brows," Margolina writes. One thing
remained very clear in the minds of the actors: if the red hangman’s rope around
the neck of the people were ever to be loosened, "the Jewish Bolsheviks would be
the first candidates for the scaffold."
Where was God in
Lubyanka? In Kolyma? On the White Sea Canal project? Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, in
the sense of one of Dostoyevsky’s God-seekers a homo religious,
does not even ask that question. He wants to know, as does Margolina, why
Russia’s Jews were both the perpetrators and victims alike during the Bolshevik
century? At the onset of the third millennium this 84-year old – the public
conscience of Russian culture – understands the first precept of historical
revisionism in a Russia unsullied with political correctness, namely, he who
breaks through the fire wall surrounding the ‘Jewish question" is sovereign.
The Dirty Revolution II
"Everyone was listening intently
to determine if the Germans were already on the way."
In June and July of 1941
those living in the regions of eastern Poland occupied by the Red Army – Polish
farmers, the bourgeoisie, the clergy, ex-soldiers, and intellectuals – all
awaited the invasion of German troops. This quote is from the Polish Jewish
historian J. Gross, author of the book Neighbors: The Murder of the Jews of
Jedwabne. Solzhenitsyn explains why Poles, Lithuanians, Latvians,
Ukrainians, Estonians, Belorussians, Bukowina-, and Moldava-Romanians could
hardly wait for the Germans to invade.
Pursuant to his central
thesis, Solzhenitsyn writes that without the high Jewish presence among the
leaders and executioners of the Bolshevik dictatorship, Lenin’s newly born
Soviet state would have been at an end, at the latest, by the time of the
Kronstadt Sailors Rebellion in 1921. Solzhenitsyn examines specific decisive
questions, as for example: Why, in the period 1939-41, did such a large
percentage of Jewry in eastern Poland, Galicia, and in the Baltic States
collaborate with the Red Army, Stalin’s secret police, and Bolshevism in
general? And why did the pogroms in these regions take place under the slogan
"Revenge for the Soviet Occupation"? Solzhenitsyn:
"In eastern Poland,
which had been incorporated in the Soviet Union in September 1939, the Jews,
especially the younger generation, welcomed the invading Red Army with
frenetic jubilation. Whether in Poland, Bessarabia, Lithuania, or Bukowina,
the Jews were the main support of Soviet power. The newspapers report that the
Jews are enthusiastically supporting the establishment of Communist rule."
(p. 329)
In that fateful year a
Polish Jew who had emigrated to France prophesized that the non-Jews who had
been subjugated to Bolshevism would one day exact a fearful war of vengeance. In
1939 Stanislav Ivanowich, a left socialist sympathetic to the Soviet Union,
warned:
"Should the
dictatorship of the Bolsheviks end one day, the collapse will be accompanied
by the atavistic, barbaric passions of Jew hate and violence. The collapse of
Soviet power would be a terrible catastrophe for Jewry; today Soviet rule
equates to Judeophilia." (p.
310)
Shoot Anti-Semites on the Spot
And as for the next
aspect examined, why was it that in 1918 the victorious Russian worker class
supported, not just an underground, but also an openly aggressive – even
Party-based – broad anti-Semitism taking the form of Jew-hatred?
Although on 27 July 1918
Lenin had issued an ukase ordering that any active anti-Semite could be
shot without going through any court procedures, a new, extremely militant form
of anti-Semitism, which had even gained influence in governmental layers of the
monopoly Party, was rife in the mid-twenties.
"This wave of the ‘new
anti-Semitism’ included the cultural cadres and educational inspectors of the
Russian worker class and reached into the Komsomol and the Party".
(p. 200f.)
To explain the reasons
for this, Solzhenitsyn cites extensively and without commentary from the
newspapers of the day. According to the newspapers, the ‘Jew Bolsheviks’ had
captured and occupied the Soviet State; they were in the top ranks of the Red
Army. Soviet power had been converted into Jewish power, and the Jews pursued
Jewish, not Russian goals. (p. 201)
In 1922 exiled Social
Revolutionaries E. Kuskova and S. Maslov, both Jews, reported:
"Judeophobia has
spread throughout present-day Russia. It has even spread to areas in which
previously no Jews had even lived and where there was never a Jewish Question.
[…]
Bolshevism today is – without any doubt –
identified with Jewish rule."
Or colloquially
expressed:
"Aron Moiseyevich
Tankelwich today walks in the place of Ivan Ivanov."
Kuskova and Maslov
reported further:
"New slogans have
appeared on the walls of the high schools – ‘Smash the Jews, Save the
Soviets’; ‘Beat the Jews Up, Save the Councils’".
In other words, the
revolutionary jargon of that day wanted to keep the Soviets and the Soviet rule,
but without Jews.
"‘Smash the Jews’ was
not the slogan of the Black Hundreds from the pogroms of Tsarist times, but
the battle cry of young Russian communards five years after the Great
October." (p. 229)
On the eve of the XII
Party Day 1923, the Politburo consisted of three Jews and three non-Jews. The
ratio in the Komsomol Presidium was three to four. In the XI Party Day, ‘Jew
Bolsheviks’ constituted 26% of the Central Committee membership. Because of this
foreign invasion and anti-Slavic trends, prominent Russian Leninists decided
upon an "anti-Jewish rebellion."
May 1924
Shortly before the
opening of the XIII Party Day, veteran Russian revolutionaries Frunze, Nogin,
and Troyanovsky called for the expulsion of the ‘Jewish leaders’ from the
Politburo. The opponents of the purge reacted quickly. In no time, Nogin died
after an operation on his esophagus, after which Frunze went under the knife.
(p. 207)
In Solzhenitsyn’s
opinion, the main reason for this outbreak of new anti-Semitism is to be found
in the hostility towards Russians inherent in the extreme Jewish
internationalism. Unlike the Jewish intelligentsia who greeted the revolution of
1918 with great passion, the Russian proletariat was not fascinated by the idea
of a Russian-led internationalism. After 1918 the Jews spoke consistently of
"their country." (p. 218)
To support his thesis
Solzhenitsyn cites Party ideologue Nikolai Bukharin, who was executed after the
last Moscow show trial. At the Leningrad Party Conference in early 1927 Bukharin
had criticized the ‘capitalistic’ nature of the Jewish mid-level bourgeoisie who
had come to power and had taken the place of the Russian bourgeoisie in the main
cities of the USSR (p. 209), and "whom we, comrades, must sharply condemn."
Former chief Bolshevik theorist Bukharin concluded by saying that the Jews
themselves were responsible for the new anti-Semitism.
It was part of Stalin’s
tactical game not just to tolerate Jews in his own entourage, but also
deliberately to place them in leading positions so that later he would have
plausible grounds for turning them over to the executioner on grievous charges.
Such was the case in the murderous collectivization program in 1928-1933 to
which the names of prominent ‘Jew Bolsheviks’ were attached. Stalin was well
aware of the hate city Jews had for everything related to the Russian and
Ukrainian peasantry. They spread terror, killing the peasants and destroying the
villages, eventually causing the famine that took the lives of at least six
million Ukrainians. The Jewish commissars in charge of the anti-kulak program,
which was tantamount to genocide, were literally the masters over life and
death.
In 1936, after the
slaughter of the peasantry "at the hands of the Bolshevik Jews," the death bell
began to toll for those who had been responsible for the carnage. For the first
time in a Russian historical work, their names are listed: Ya. Yakovlev-Epstein,
M. Kolmanovich, G. Roschal, V. Feygin. (p. 285) The books covering the crimes in
the first twenty years after Lenin seized power fill many meters of shelf space.
With this one Solzhenitsyn volume, the subsequent reckoning with the Slavic
peasant holocaust has only begun.
Bread and Knowledge, Stomach and Brain
There were also reasons
for the outburst of proletariat anti-Semitism in two other sensitive areas. The
Russian working class young people were getting nowhere in their quest for
advancement on the educational front. In 1926, 26% of university students were
Jews who had enjoyed a bourgeois background. (p. 202). Mostly Jews, between 30
and 50%, occupied the main positions in the domestic and foreign trade
commissariats. Their empire included rural and urban store chains, restaurants,
business canteens, prison and barracks galleys, cooperatives, and consumer goods
production. Management of the Gosplan (State Plan) and the five-year plans was
exercised by Rosenholz, Rukhimovich, Epstein, Frumkin, and Selemki; they
controlled the nation’s food supply. In 1936 they themselves became fodder for
the execution chambers in Lubyanka.
Despite the enormous
bloodletting in 1936-37, millions of Jews still served the Stalinist regime with
cadaver-like loyalty; they remained enthusiastic, unshakable, almost blind
defenders of the cause of Socialism. Solzhenitsyn writes:
"Cadaver-like
obedience in the GPU, the Red Army, the diplomatic service, and on the
ideological front. The passionate participation of young Jews in these
branches was in no way dampened by the bloody events of 1936-38."
(p. 281)
The world spirit, Hegel
says, assists the lowest creatures to realize its impenetrable intentions. In
the realization of the socialist experiment the world spirit did not just serve
the lower creatures. Nikolai Ostrovsky, crippled and blind, wrote his
autobiographical novel How the Steel Was Hardened as an idealist. Others
belonged among the lowest creatures, and Solzhenitsyn enumerates them in the
chapters concerning the secret police. (In the book reviews published in the
German newsmagazine Der Spiegel and the German daily Frankfurter
Allgemeine Zeitung, these bloody chapters were ignored.)
Gassing Trucks and Poison Chairs
From the very beginning
the secret police was under the control of the ‘Bolshevik Jews.’ Solzhenitsyn
revealed their names in the most interesting chapter of his book called The
Nineteen Twenties. They are the biographies of the mass murderers at
their desks in the Cheka, the OGPU, and the GPU. But they were not just sitting
at their desks. Uritzki, Unschlicht, Katznelson, Bermann, Agranov, Spiegelglas,
Schwarz, Asbel, Chaifetz, Pauker, Maier, Yagoda, personally participated in the
tortures, hangings, crucifixions, and incinerations. Dzerzhinski, the founder of
the Cheka, had three deputies from this guard of iron Bolsheviks – Gerson,
Luszki, and Yagoda. An elite of Bolshevik Jews! Years later, when the Gulag
Archipelago was being expanded, they were again to be found in the front line of
executioners. Israel Pliner was the slave master of the Moscow-Volga-Canal;
Lazar Kogan, Zinovey Katznelson, and Boris Bermann directed the forced labor
genocide at the White Sea Canal project. The Great Purge became their graveyard.
Solzhenitsyn comments:
(p. 293)
"One cannot deny that
history elected very many Jews to be the executors of Russia’s fate."
Commissioned by the NKVD,
the Jewish designer of execution systems, Grigori Mayranovsky, invented the gas
chair. When, in 1951, Mayranovsky, as the former head of the NKVD Laboratory
Institute, was himself incarcerated, he wrote to Beria:
"Please do not forget
that by my hand hundreds enemy-pigs of the Soviet State found their deserved
end."
The mobile gassing truck
was invented and tested by Isay Davidovich Berg, head of the NKVD Economics
Division in the Moscow region. In 1937, a second highpoint in the Great Purge,
prisoners were sentenced to death in conveyor-belt fashion, packed into trucks,
taken to the places of execution, shot in the back of the neck, and buried. In
the economic sense, Isay Berg found this method of liquidation inefficient,
time-consuming and cost-intensive. He, therefore, in 1937 designed the mobile
asphyxiation chamber, the gassing truck (Russian: dushegubka, p. 297).
The doomed were loaded into a tightly sealed, completely airtight Russian Ford;
during the drive the deadly exhaust from a gasoline engine was directed into the
section containing those sentenced to death. Upon reaching the mass gravesite,
the truck dumped the corpses into the burial ditch.
The Dirty Revolution III
History sheds blood. The
history of Bolshevism shed the blood of at least sixty-six million, according to
the calculations of statistician Prof. I. A. Kurganov, cited by Solzhenitsyn in
his Novy Mir essay "The Russian Question at the End of the Century,"
Moscow 1994. The crimes against humanity of the Bolshevik genocide up to 1937,
i.e., in the first twenty years of the permanent terror, amounted to
twenty million victims. In his scientific probing, Solzhenitsyn does not ignore
the moral imperfect; he does not fail to connect the uniqueness of the Bolshevik
holocaust with the exorcistic destructive hate of a particular ethnic-religious
group in old Russia. This may well be the reason why this second volume of
Solzhenitsyn’s Two Hundred Years Together has been given the silent
treatment or has been distorted, not in Putin’s Russia, but rather in Germany’s
establishment media. (An honest translation of this work by Solzhenitsyn would
constitute a major contribution to historiography.)
Schirrmacher and Holm: Refuted
The motives and
obsessions of the left-oriented intellectual class recall the Cambridge Spy case
(Philby, Maclean, Blunt, Burgess). Specifically, in the BBC sentimentalized
story, in which one of the decadents proclaims:
"To fight Fascism, you
have to be a Communist."
German reviews
concerning the crimes of the Soviet secret police state sympathetically that in
the final analysis at least the Jews in the GPU, NKVD, and KGB were fighting
against Hitler. "Russians and Jews fought together against Hitler," Ms. Holm
writes in the Schirrmacher review. (Many reviews read like news reports from the
Soviet Union!) In the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung of 29 January 2003,
she writes:
"After the October
Revolution, the author explains, the high Jewish presence in the young Soviet
state was found acting with great innovative agitation and drive in fields of
State service, among the people’s commissars, and in the top ranks of the
Army."
That, however, is not
Solzhenitsyn’s interpretation! On the basis of document analysis, Solzhenitsyn
states that Lenin had three reasons for elevating young secular,
revolutionary-minded Jews to the State’s elite, in effect replacing the Tsarist
bureaucracy. First, because of the deadly hate the young Jews had for Russian
traditions, religious rites, historical models, hate for everything Russian and
Russia itself. Second, their willingness to cross the last taboo borders in
morality. And third, their readiness to physically liquidate the enemy.
"Mixed Blood Mestizo"
Lenin, the
internationalist, was no friend of Jews who were Zionists. In 1903 he expressed
the opinion that there was no such thing as a Jewish nationality; the concept
was a monstrous invention of a moribund capitalism. Stalin, along the same
lines, considered Jewry a "paper nation" that would over time "disappear in an
inevitable assimilation."
For Solzhenitsyn, Lenin
himself was "a mixed blood mestizo." (p. 76) A grandfather on his father’s side
was an Asian Kalmuck; the other grandfather, Israel Blank, was a Jew from
Volhynia, who after converting to the Russian Orthodox Church took the first
name of Alexander. His grandmother on his father’s side, Anna Johanna, had
German and Swedish blood; her maiden name was Grossschopf. Solzhenitsyn:
"Initially Russians
did not consider Lenin to be an enemy of the Russian people, although at
certain times his behavior became anti-Russian. Many Russians considered him a
product of another race. Despite that, we as Russians cannot completely
renounce Lenin." (p. 76)
A Bestseller in Russia
In a Russia free of
literature-policing Solzhenitsyn’s book of historical revelations has achieved
the status of bestseller. The first hundred thousand edition of the second
volume was sold out shortly after it appeared. Solzhenitsyn’s expression "a
century of crimes" has become widely used among writers. Crimes with
consequences to the 22nd century, because "never before had Russia
stood so close to the historical abyss, separating her from the void," the
poetess Natalia Ayrapetrova writes in Literaturnaya gazeta (22
January 2002). Solzhenitsyn has set an avalanche loose. A new book, The Enemy
Within. Genealogy of Evil (576 pp., Feri Publishers, Moscow), by the
historian Nikolai Ostrovski has just appeared. Ostrovski became famous for his
Holy Slaves and Temple of the Chimeras, discourses critical of
Judaism that do not permit the author to be banished to the dead end of
conspiracy theories.
In contrast to the
general Russian acceptance of Solzhenitsyn’s second volume, the German-language
edition has been met with silence and misrepresentation, and in most cases with
a touch of Russophobia. Der Spiegel (7/2003) provided an interpretation
that contradicted the facts. For example, Der Spiegel’s reviewer wrote
that under Stalin many Jews were alienated from Soviet power and that there was
a reduction in the number of Jewish ‘collaborators’ in the Party and the secret
police.
An interpretation of a
critical chapter in Solzhenitsyn’s book vacillates between trivialization and
obfuscation. Spiegel uses the word ‘collaborators’ instead of accomplices
in the various phases of Stalin’s rise. In the mid nineteen twenties until the
mid thirties the Jewish component in the leadership functions of the Party and
State apparatus in the Ukraine amounted to 22.6% (in the capital Kharkov it was
30%), in Belorussia it was 30.6% (in the capital Minsk it was almost 40%) and in
Moscow city it was about 12%. Six and a half times more Jews occupied cadre
positions in the Soviet ruling class than existed in the total Jewish
population, which was 1.82% in 1926.
"The greatest influx
of Jews to Soviet government offices took place in the cities and metropolitan
areas of the Soviet Republics,"
Solzhenitsyn observes
(p. 199), and it is characteristic of Der Spiegel’s and the
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung’s lack of objectivity and philosemitism that
they deny their German readers the most important data and numerical comparisons
given in Chapter 18.
Even in the purge year
of 1936 one still sees a disproportionately high representation in the "People’s
Commissariat of Jews:" Litvinov-Finkelstein, Yagoda, Rosenholz, Weizer,
Kalmanovich, Kaganovich. In the same government Sozhenitsyn observes whole
groups of people’s commissars (ministers) with the names Solz, Gamarnik,
Gurevich, and Ginzburg. These are only a few of the hundreds. A predominance of
‘Jew Bolsheviks’ is noted in the cultural fields, the brainwashing section, and
the new-speak department. In the nineteen twenties the Jewish internationalists
purged the history books. Radical ideological reeducation by race haters like
Goykhbarg, Larin, Radek, and Rotstein began by deleting and forbidding such
concepts as ‘Russian history’ and ‘Great Russian,’ putting them on the black
list of counter-revolutionary terminology. In the Moscow Party press Jewish
writers advocated blowing-up the Minin-Posharsky Monument on Red Square (p.
275).
But to come back to the
left-oriented German media: The spirited derussification program conducted by
the ‘Jew Bolsheviks’ during the nineteen twenties is not mentioned at all,
neither by Uwe Klussmann nor by Kerstin Holm. Nor do the terms Cheka and
GPU appear in the German reviews.
The Cheka – the
bulldozer locomotive of State terror, the bulldozer for sixty-six million
corpses, and the gas turbine for the Bolshevik holocaust – does not exist in
Schirrmacher’s daily newspaper and Augstein’s successor Holm, chief editor of
Der Spiegel, as a shorthand symbol for death. Is it simply the rejection of
the truth, or shame, or fear of exposure because many liberal humanists have so
long stood beside Stalinist humanism? In any case, ethical and physical
degenerates do use the word when it is buried in history as a unique chapter on
the Cheka/GPU under the laurels of the anti-Hitler war.
Name Lists Betray Everything
Solzhenitsyn lists the
names of about fifty mass murderers, desk criminals, and murderers of prisoners.
(p. 300f.) Their first names betray the ethnic origin of these monsters. Moise
Framing, Mordichai Chorus, Josef Khodorovsky, Isaak Solz, Naum Zorkin, Moise
Kalmanovich, Samuel Agurski, Lazar Aronstam, Israel Weizer, Aron Weinstein,
Isaak Grindberg, Sholom Dvoylazki, Max Daitsh, Yesif Dreiser, Samuel Saks, Jona
Jakir, Moise Kharitonov, Frid Markus, Solomon Kruglikov, Israel Razgon, Benjamin
Sverdlov, Leo Kritzman…
"Here and now we are
making an end to synagogues forever,"
the new foreign minister
Molotov is reported to have said in the Spring of 1939 as he undertook to purge
his own ministry. (Litvinov-Finkelstein took revenge in 1943 when he gave
Roosevelt a personal secret list of Stalin’s pogroms.) In comparison with the
foreign ministry, the official pogrom in the ministry of internal affairs was
much more dramatic. Between 1 January 1935 and 1 January 1938, Jewish dominance
in the ministry of internal affairs fell from about 50% of ministry members to
about 6%. Solzhenitsyn writes:
"The rulers over the
fate of the Russian people believed that they were irreplaceable and
invulnerable. All the more terrible for them when the blow fell. They had to
face the collapse of their world and their view of the world."
Also in this section
Solzhenitsyn reveals the names of the butchers who once bossed the secret
police. They once headed the Lubyanka, now they themselves ended in the
corridors of Lubyanka: pistol-flaunting Matvey Berman, Josef Blatt, Abraham
Belenki, Isaak Shapiro, Serge Shpigelglas, Israel Leblevski, Pinkus Simanovski,
Abraham Slutski, Benjamin Gerson, Zinovi Katsnelson, Natan Margolin – an almost
endless list of ‘Jew Bolsheviks.’ These names are not mentioned in Germany, the
"land of the perpetrators." Salpeter, Seligmann, Kagan, Rappoport, Fridland,
Rayski-Lakhman, Yoselevich, Faylovich… prominent names in Stalin’s list for
execution after 1936. The Jewish Menshevik, S. Shvarts, who emigrated to the
United States, noted in 1966 in a documentation of the American Jewish Worker
Committee:
"The purges resulted
in the physical disappearance of almost all Jewish Communists who had played
an important role in the USSR." .
(p. 327)
Hebrew or Yiddish
The early Stalin
believed in the eventual assimilation of the Jews under the dogmas of the
"proletarian revolution." Innately opposed to this, most of the Jewish
Bolsheviks fiercely rejected assimilation, i.e., their disappearance as a
special ethnic group in Socialism (by assimilation they understood a mortally
feared Russification). From the beginning these Jews fought in the Jewish
Commissariat (Yevkom) and the Jewish Section within the Russian Communist Party
(Yevsek) for the "preservation of the Jewish people" in the Socialist state, and
even for the creation of a "Jewish Soviet Nation in the USSR." The historical
recreation of these events is a service of Solzhenitsyn. Naturally it found no
mention in the German book reviews.
The promotion of Yiddish
as a State language was a way of establishing the Jewish Soviet Nation; it was
recognized by law for the first time in Belorus in 1920.That recognition meant
not only a ‘no’ to Zionism, but also to the expansion of New Hebrew (Ivrit). In
the early 1920s Ivrit was officially forbidden, while Yiddish was recognized as
a "Language of Soviet Proletariat Culture." (p. 255). Marc Chagall and Ed
Lisizki were considered in the vanguard of a Yiddish-Communist culture – the New
Man from Vitebsk.
A political setback came
at the end of the twenties when Yevkom and Yevsek were abolished. The younger
generation of Soviet Jews accepted this without protest, Solzhenitsyn reports.
Without protest, without rebellion, and without a "Kronstadt." The abandonment
of Yiddish occurred with the triumph of an international atheism, and
internationalism without nationalities, without national identities, but with
one single exception: "The Soviet People!" An artificial construct, sacrificed
to the hecatombs of proletariat blood, the blood of Slavs, Balts, Moslems, and
Caucasians; the Soviet people, a drawing-board product, a Frankenstein
monster, was created in Gulagism, whose existence without the enforcers from the
ranks of the ‘Jew Bolsheviks’ would not be conceivable. Alexander Solzhenitsyn
documents this on almost 600 pages of text. When near the end of the war Stalin
ordered the liquidation of the Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee and proceeded to
murder their intellectual leaders, as well as programming the end of Yiddish as
a separate culture, the Bolshevik solution of the old Russian ‘Jewish Question’
came to a bizarre conclusion, i.e., on the ramps to the Gulag.
Final Comments
"Our history is one of
tragedies and catastrophes," writes Svetlana Alekseyevicha thirteen years after
the collapse of the Soviet Union. Solzhenitsyn’s Gulag Archipelago
appeared in the West thirty years ago. The Main Directorate of Camps (Glawnoje
Uprawlenije Lagerei = GULag), which lasted for half a century, was one of
the saddest catastrophes in the two thousand year history of Russia. Looking
back today, one can say with good reason that Solzhenitsyn’s reportage on the
bloodiest crimes against humanity in modern times belongs among the spiritual
turning points that represented the beginning of the end of the Red Imperium.
Solzhenitsyn’s chronicle
from hell prompts the question of why today the historical reality of the Gulag
is much less widely and passionately remembered than is the persecution of the
Jews under National Socialism. There can be no rational answer to this. The
reproach is that a work like the Gulag Archipelago exceeds the powers of
imagination and that – based on the laws of classical aesthetics – it ought not
be produced at all because it inundates the reader with unrelieved pictures of
disgust and revulsion. But then, by the same logic, a play like Macbeth
might also be considered too off-putting. In his third volume Solzhenitsyn
depicts the slaughter of five thousand women and children in the Kingir slave
labor camp in June 1954 (only thirteen years after Babi Yar).
The opinion that the
Gulag, unlike the killing of the Jews, has yet to find a Hollywood director of
the caliber of Steven Spielberg to film it, is negated by the fact that Russia,
herself, has highly talented, even brilliant film producers, dramaturges, and
screenplay writers whose work can easily stand comparison with that in the West.
The showing of the play I Will Repay by Serge Kuznetsov in the Maly
Theater in Moscow, for example, always plays to a full house – standing room
only for months on end! The play recreates the last tragic moments of the Tsar’s
family. For Russia’s Orthodox, but also for Russian revisionist historians, 16
July 1918 was the ultimate ejaculation of Gulag thinking. The role of the
Bolshevik Jews is handled directly in this stage play as when Botkin, the Tsar’s
physician, says to one of his guards:
"The time will come
when everyone will believe that the Jews were responsible for this and you
will be the victims of the revenge."
For the lyricist
Stanislav Kunyayev, chief editor of the literary magazine Nash Sovremennik,
the murder of the Romanovs was the product of "depraved intellects and a satanic
will." Kunyayev is one of a group of seventy leading Russian intellectuals who
have signed their names to a letter, in which they hold Communist Jews
responsible for the murder of the Tsar, the Bolshevik putsch, and the mass
murders that followed it. In the case of Kunyayev it is clear why the filming of
the Gulag era would be unthinkable in a Western country for the time being. Or,
to put it differently: Why the Jew Steven Spielberg shies away like Belshazzar
from the handwriting on the wall. It is not just the sheer magnitude of the
crimes that block Spielberg’s undertaking a film of the Gulag, it is much more
the taboo question of the unspoken complicity of secularized Jews in a unique
breach of civilized behavior that resulted in the execution chambers in
Lefortovo, the stone quarries of the White Sea Canal project, and the gold mines
of Kolyma.
In Germany, the land of
the Adornos and Friedmans, the dreadful accusation of anti-Semitism is held in
the ready for anyone who wants to use it at anytime; it is omnipresent and
inexpensive, and packs a deadly explosive force socially and professionally. The
left-liberal review in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung of 26 June 2003
published an allegedly lost story of the Bolshevik writer, Isaak Babel, who was
shot In January 1941 in a Bolshevik forced labor camp. The previously unknown
story, Esfir’s Ring, aesthetically and morally without any reference to
Russian literature, eulogizes the death of the Jewish secret policeman, Esfir
Rubenblum, "Commissar of the Special Department of the Kiev Cheka," who died "a
hero’s death in the struggle against enemies of the revolution." Original
quotations of Isaak Babel were written a few years before the "hero’s death" of
the Civil War Chekist Babel.
This world-famous
Bolshevik (the evaluation of Frank Schirrmacher, chief editor of the
Frankfurter) confirms in one of his last contributions the Jewish leadership
in the execution squads of the secret police in the Lenin period. Dr.
Schirrmacher found no reason to go into Babel’s Chekist past. In Germany the
deadly threat of the anti-Semitism shibboleth prevents an objective discussion
of the anthropological roots of the theme Solzhenitsyn has illuminated.
On the occasion of his
receiving the left-wing German Ludwig-Börne-Prize for outstanding performances
in literature, the American-Jewish scholar George Steiner said in his thank-you
speech:
"In my opinion there
can be no higher honor, no higher nobility, than to belong to a people who has
never engaged in persecution. Since my childhood I have been proud not to have
that arrogance. I belong to the highest race because it does not persecute
others. We are the only ones; we never had the power to do so. Alleluia!"
(Frankfurter Allgemeine
Zeitung, 31 May 2003)
Never persecuted others?
Never held power?
"The Jewish commissar
with the leather jacket and Mauser pistol, often speaking broken Russian, is
the typical image of revolutionary power."
This statement comes
from Sonya Margolina, who is proud to be "the daughter of a Jewish Bolshevik."
Margolina today lives in Berlin. Her book Das Ende der Lügen: Rußland und die
Juden im 20. Jahrhundert (Siedler, Berlin 1992), from which the above
passage is cited, follows it with these words:
"The tragedy of Jewry
is that there was no political option to escape the vengeance for the
historical sin of the Jews, namely, their enthusiastic cooperation with the
Communist regime. The victory of the Soviet regime saved them for a while, but
vengeance still lurked ahead."
© Oct. 31/Nov. 7,
2002 / Jan. 30./31 2003/Sept. 17./30, 2003
First published in Vierteljahreshefte für
freie Geschichtsforschung 7(3&4) (2003), pp. 451-460. Translated by Dan
Michaels.
Source: The Revisionist 2(3)
(2004), pp. 342-351.
Reproduced gratefully from:
http://www.vho.org/tr/2004/3/Strauss342-351.html
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